Native UI Components
There are tons of native UI widgets out there ready to be used in the latest apps - some of them are part of the platform, others are available as third-party libraries, and still more might be in use in your very own portfolio. React Native has several of the most critical platform components already wrapped, like ScrollView
and TextInput
, but not all of them, and certainly not ones you might have written yourself for a previous app. Fortunately, we can wrap up these existing components for seamless integration with your React Native application.
Like the native module guide, this too is a more advanced guide that assumes you are somewhat familiar with iOS programming. This guide will show you how to build a native UI component, walking you through the implementation of a subset of the existing MapView
component available in the core React Native library.
iOS MapView example
Let's say we want to add an interactive Map to our app - might as well use MKMapView
, we only need to make it usable from JavaScript.
Native views are created and manipulated by subclasses of RCTViewManager
. These subclasses are similar in function to view controllers, but are essentially singletons - only one instance of each is created by the bridge. They expose native views to the RCTUIManager
, which delegates back to them to set and update the properties of the views as necessary. The RCTViewManager
s are also typically the delegates for the views, sending events back to JavaScript via the bridge.
To expose a view you can:
- Subclass
RCTViewManager
to create a manager for your component. - Add the
RCT_EXPORT_MODULE()
marker macro. - Implement the
-(UIView *)view
method.
Note: Do not attempt to set the frame
or backgroundColor
properties on the UIView
instance that you expose through the -view
method. React Native will overwrite the values set by your custom class in order to match your JavaScript component's layout props. If you need this granularity of control it might be better to wrap the UIView
instance you want to style in another UIView
and return the wrapper UIView
instead. See Issue 2948 for more context.
In the example above, we prefixed our class name with
RNT
. Prefixes are used to avoid name collisions with other frameworks. Apple frameworks use two-letter prefixes, and React Native usesRCT
as a prefix. In order to avoid name collisions, we recommend using a three-letter prefix other thanRCT
in your own classes.
Then you need a little bit of JavaScript to make this a usable React component:
Make sure to use RNTMap
here. We want to require the manager here, which will expose the view of our manager for use in Javascript.
Note: When rendering, don't forget to stretch the view, otherwise you'll be staring at a blank screen.
This is now a fully-functioning native map view component in JavaScript, complete with pinch-zoom and other native gesture support. We can't really control it from JavaScript yet, though :(
Properties
The first thing we can do to make this component more usable is to bridge over some native properties. Let's say we want to be able to disable zooming and specify the visible region. Disabling zoom is a boolean, so we add this one line:
Note that we explicitly specify the type as BOOL
- React Native uses RCTConvert
under the hood to convert all sorts of different data types when talking over the bridge, and bad values will show convenient "RedBox" errors to let you know there is an issue ASAP. When things are straightforward like this, the whole implementation is taken care of for you by this macro.
Now to actually disable zooming, we set the property in JS:
To document the properties (and which values they accept) of our MapView component we'll add a wrapper component and document the interface with React PropTypes
:
Now we have a nicely documented wrapper component to work with. Note that we changed requireNativeComponent
's second argument from null
to the new MapView
wrapper component. This allows the infrastructure to verify that the propTypes match the native props in order to reduce the chances of mismatches between the Objective-C and JavaScript code.
Next, let's add the more complex region
prop. We start by adding the native code:
Ok, this is more complicated than the BOOL
case we had before. Now we have a MKCoordinateRegion
type that needs a conversion function, and we have custom code so that the view will animate when we set the region from JS. Within the function body that we provide, json
refers to the raw value that has been passed from JS. There is also a view
variable which gives us access to the manager's view instance, and a defaultView
that we use to reset the property back to the default value if JS sends us a null sentinel.
You could write any conversion function you want for your view - here is the implementation for MKCoordinateRegion
via a category on RCTConvert
. It uses an already existing category of ReactNative RCTConvert+CoreLocation
:
These conversion functions are designed to safely process any JSON that the JS might throw at them by displaying "RedBox" errors and returning standard initialization values when missing keys or other developer errors are encountered.
To finish up support for the region
prop, we need to document it in propTypes
(or we'll get an error that the native prop is undocumented), then we can set it like any other prop:
Here you can see that the shape of the region is explicit in the JS documentation - ideally we could codegen some of this stuff, but that's not happening yet.
Sometimes your native component will have some reserved properties that you don't want to be part of the API for the associated React component. For example, Switch
has a custom onChange
handler for the raw native event, and exposes an onValueChange
handler property that is invoked with the boolean value rather than the raw event. Since you don't want these native only properties to be part of the API, you don't want to put them in propTypes
, but if you don't you'll get an error. The solution is to add them to the nativeOnly
option, e.g.
Events
So now we have a native map component that we can control freely from JS, but how do we deal with events from the user, like pinch-zooms or panning to change the visible region?
Until now we've only returned a MKMapView
instance from our manager's -(UIView *)view
method. We can't add new properties to MKMapView
so we have to create a new subclass from MKMapView
which we use for our View. We can then add a onRegionChange
callback on this subclass:
Note that all RCTBubblingEventBlock
must be prefixed with on
. Next, declare an event handler property on RNTMapManager
, make it a delegate for all the views it exposes, and forward events to JS by calling the event handler block from the native view.
In the delegate method -mapView:regionDidChangeAnimated:
the event handler block is called on the corresponding view with the region data. Calling the onRegionChange
event handler block results in calling the same callback prop in JavaScript. This callback is invoked with the raw event, which we typically process in the wrapper component to simplify API:
Handling multiple native views
A React Native view can have more than one child view in the view tree eg.
In this example, the class MyNativeView
is a wrapper for a NativeComponent
and exposes methods, which will be called on the iOS platform. MyNativeView
is defined in MyNativeView.ios.js
and contains proxy methods of NativeComponent
.
When the user interacts with the component, like clicking the button, the backgroundColor
of MyNativeView
changes. In this case UIManager
would not know which MyNativeView
should be handled and which one should change backgroundColor
. Below you will find a solution to this problem:
Now the above component has a reference to a particular MyNativeView
which allows us to use a specific instance of MyNativeView
. Now the button can control which MyNativeView
should change its backgroundColor
. In this example let's assume that callNativeMethod
changes backgroundColor
.
MyNativeView.ios.js
contains code as follow:
callNativeMethod
is our custom iOS method which for example changes the backgroundColor
which is exposed through MyNativeView
. This method uses UIManager.dispatchViewManagerCommand
which needs 3 parameters:
(nonnull NSNumber \*)reactTag
โ -โ id of react view.commandID:(NSInteger)commandID
โ -โ Id of the native method that should be calledcommandArgs:(NSArray<id> \*)commandArgs
โ -โ Args of the native method that we can pass from JS to native.
RNCMyNativeViewManager.m
Here the callNativeMethod
is defined in the RNCMyNativeViewManager.m
file and contains only one parameter which is (nonnull NSNumber*) reactTag
. This exported function will find a particular view using addUIBlock
which contains the viewRegistry
parameter and returns the component based on reactTag
allowing it to call the method on the correct component.
Styles
Since all our native react views are subclasses of UIView
, most style attributes will work like you would expect out of the box. Some components will want a default style, however, for example UIDatePicker
which is a fixed size. This default style is important for the layout algorithm to work as expected, but we also want to be able to override the default style when using the component. DatePickerIOS
does this by wrapping the native component in an extra view, which has flexible styling, and using a fixed style (which is generated with constants passed in from native) on the inner native component:
The RCTDatePickerIOSConsts
constants are exported from native by grabbing the actual frame of the native component like so:
This guide covered many of the aspects of bridging over custom native components, but there is even more you might need to consider, such as custom hooks for inserting and laying out subviews. If you want to go even deeper, check out the source code of some of the implemented components.